“The more you share in your application form, the easier it will be for us to see how you’ll help build the future of holographic computing with us, one inspired app at a time,” Microsoft says.

Microsoft has also revealed the HoloLens dev kit’s battery life, which according to Petri will run for two to three hours of active use. Other tech specs include a custom 32-bit processor, 2GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, four environment-sensing cameras, one depth camera, four microphones, one ambient light sensor, and various sensors for measuring movement. The device also includes a 2-megapixel photo and video camera, which lets users create standard videos that combine real-world and holographic images. A Bluetooth “clicker” for controlling the action will ship with the dev kit as well.

So far, Microsoft hasn’t given any details about a consumer launch for HoloLens, though last fall Asus CEO Jonney Shih hinted that third-party hardware makers might be able to produce their own holographic headsets eventually.

Why this matters: Unless you’re an app developer with money to burn, Microsoft’s vision of a hologram-infused future is likely to be a long ways off. Still, the impending dev kit launch is a big step for HoloLens, which Microsoft announced a little over a year ago and at the moment has no equal on the market. After sleeping through the smartphone revolution, Microsoft is banking on augmented reality as the next big thing, and hoping HoloLens will be its head start.

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